baseless slanders
The Chinese idiom, w ú f à ngzu à L à ng in pinyin, means that something happens without reason. It means to make trouble on purpose. The same as "no wind and no fire". Source: Lu Xun's "extras: boring"
The origin of Idioms
Source: Lu Xun's "a collection outside the collection: biting at the beginning" is boring: "the original text says: but the word" she "has never been satirized. He said, "it's a translation of she, not without wind and waves."
Discrimination of words
Make trouble without reason
To calm down
Idiom usage
Used in a derogatory sense. It is generally used as predicate.
Examples
Some people often regard rumors as making waves without wind, which is very wrong.
Chinese PinYin : wú fēng zuò làng
baseless slanders
make up deficiency by funds elsewhere. yí dōng jiù xī